For the first time since freshman year in college, I recently got the flu. It came out of nowhere like an anatomical mugging. First, some stabbing chest pains. Then, general soreness in my back. As I sat at my office, I could feel the spring and coil of my being winding down ever so slowly. I knew something wasn't right. Luckily, I have a general internist who takes me on a moment's notice.
The nurse took my blood pressure. It was low as usual. A gene I inherited from the maternal side of my parents. Thanks, Mom.
She took my temperature and said "wow." I don't think you want to hear "wow" after a thermometer has been in your ear.
"You have a temperature of 102.8."
I replied that's not a temperature, it's an FM rock station.
My doctor diagnosed me with the flu and the joke we have had every year with my annual physical was whether I should get a flu shot. I never do, because I just know that, if I did, I would finally get the flu.
So, Doc, it's too late to get the flu shot this year?
The actual flu made its grand entrance the very next day. With chills and teeth chattering like Buckwheat in a haunted house. I shook so much that I must have looked like Katharine Hepburn. I covered myself with one of a dozen Dodger fleece blankets I own and laid down on my bed.
It was 1PM. The next conscious moment I had was at 5:30PM.
I don't suffer inactivity well. I made the most of my down time with some work-related projects. I even took a conference call. But, all throughout, there was a general sluggishness.
I thought back to the last time I had the flu. It was New Year's Eve in freshman year at Fordham. That, too, came out of the blue. And I remembered being out of circulation for a while. And hated it, too.
Because, let's face it, being sick was only "fun" when you were a kid. You had parents waiting on you hand and foot. And, of course, you were missing a spelling test or a math quiz. Sweet. Illness then had its perks.
It always started the same way. A scene that was repeated countless times on multiple
mornings. I'd wake up feeling shitty. And I would subject myself to my
mother's careful examination.
Hand on the forehead. Hot or cold?
A peer down the throat. Red or scratchy?
Two hands feeling both sides of my neck. Glands swollen?
If
I scored two of the three, I was home free. Literally. I could stay
home from school. And, as an added bonus, I was ordered to get out of
bed and move to the living room couch.
In front of the television, as you see me above.
Yes!
First,
I'd have to choke down a bowl of some H-O oatmeal, the "official
breakfast of being home sick from school." Then, I'd flip on the TV and
settle back for a day of some really tough recuperation.
In
those days, daytime television was more fun. You had a bunch of game
shows and sitcom reruns that I had never seen first run. All stuff I
never got to watch at any other time.
And the fun started early. Er, cough, cough. There
were odd cartoons on in the pre-breakfast hours. It was almost like the
minor leagues of animation. They weren't good enough to make my prime
cartoon time, which was after school. I remember Channel 7 in NY ran
silent cartoons with this farmer and all these crudely drawn animals
early in the day. Goofy stuff. Purchased off the back of the movie truck
at a discount no doubt.
After that, a-choo,
a-choo, there was the Little Rascals AKA Our Gang. They were my absolute
favorite comedy shorts. I disconnected a bit on Spanky and Alfalfa, but
the earlier ones with the likes of Farina, Jackie Cooper, and Wheezer
were brilliant. I still watch them via DVD to this day. Forget all the
allegations over how racist they were. This was a group of kids playing
together, regardless of skin color or nationality. Just like my
neighborhood. And I always enjoyed the great product placement for such
wonderful household staples as castor oil, limburger cheese, and tabasco
sauce. At the time, I had no idea what any of them were.
Around
9AM, my mother would pop in for another follow-up examination.
Hand on
the forehead. A peer down the throat. Two hands feeling both sides of my
neck. This was a key moment in my day. If two of the three were still
persisting after the amazingly curative powers of H-O Oatmeal had been
administered, I was sunk. And probably really sick. This could mean only
one thing. My mother would head to the telephone. And I would hear
three very scary words.
"Hello, Dr. Fiegoli?"
Yep,
these were the days when a kid's doctor made house calls. The key to
getting him was to call before 10AM before he started off on his rounds.
My mother never seemed to miss the deadline. Dr. Fiegoli was a frequent
visitor to our house. At the very least, I'd have a few more hours of
TV nirvana until he showed.
In the mornings
of my stay-at-home maladies, I still exercised the same brain power I
would have used at school. By watching game shows.
There was "Concentration."
"Number four. And number nineteen." Sorry, not a match.
"Say When." And I remember little of that game except that it was hosted by Art James.
"Eye
Guess." Hosted by Bill Cullen, who I never could understand why you
didn't see him walking around on the stage. Years later, I discovered
the reason. He had polio.
"The Hollywood Squares" with my favorite comedian Paul Lynde. "Abby Dalton, you're today's Secret Square."
Mixed
in with all the game shows were the wonderful sitcoms from the 50s. Of
course, "I Love Lucy." But, there were other programs that I had only
heard tales about from my grandmother and grandfather.
"December
Bride." With one of my grandmother's favorites, Spring Byington. And
this had a spin-off show that was also repeated during the day. "Pete
And Gladys."
"My Little Margie." With Gale
Storm and some old hag named Mrs. Odetts living next door and a Black
elevator operator played by Willie Best.
"The
Burns and Allen Show." George, Gracie, Harry Von Zell, and that magic
TV mirror which allowed George to control the action. Perhaps the most
ingenious gimmick ever featured on a television situation comedy.
Depending
upon my illness, lunch would be usually a can of Campbell's Condensed
Chicken Noodle Soup. Just add water. No fuss, no muss. If my throat
wasn't a problem, a sandwich was in order. Usually bologna or my beloved
Taylor Ham. On the side, six green olives stuffed with pimentoes. Not
five, not seven, not four. Six exactly. This was my usual midday repast
in both sickness and in health. Having consumed the meal, I'd lay back
down and settle in for some more great television. Except...
DING DONG!!!!!!!!
Our front door bell was always more ominous if I was home sick.
The dog barked wildly. My mother would bound down the stairs to open the door.
"Hello, Dr. Fiegoli!"
Crap.
Now,
my pediatrician was a really nice man. But he couldn't help but be
scary to a seven-year-old. He'd charge up the stairs like a bull out of a
chute.
Plus he looked just like that actor who was showing up on all those
sitcoms I had just been enjoying. Frank Nelson. Very unsettling as my
two worlds were suddenly mixing in a bizarre way. And his booming voice
could be heard from Mount Vernon to New Rochelle.
"OOOOOOH AND HOW'S THE PATIENT?"
Gee, Doc, isn't that what you're supposed to figure out? Well, that's probably what Mrs. Odetts might have said.
Dr.
Fiegoli then administered the same exam that my mother had already done
twice. Hand on the forehead. A peer down the throat. Two hands on both
sides of the neck. Hello, do you get paid to do this?
The
bad news is that most of the time Dr. Fiegoli showed up, I really was
sick. Chicken Pox. Measles, both German and regular. Ear infection.
Gland infection. He'd spend five minutes with me, fifteen minutes with
my mother, and two seconds dashing off a prescription, which would get
immediately filled at Mr. Post's drugstore.
It seemed like Dr. Fiegoli would never leave, but he always did. I'd turn back to the TV, but...
"No television now. You really are sick."
Damn.
I'd
feign a nap for several hours in the afternoon. By then, daytime TV was
full of soap operas which were captivating Grandma downstairs but
boring the shit out of me upstairs. Eventually, I would inch my way back
to the television controls. Because, when it was three o'clock, it was
time for...
Popeye the Sailor. My favorite cartoon character of all time.
WPIX
Channel 11 ran these in the afternoon, usually hosted by Captain Jack
McCarthy, who was not really a captain but definitely Irish. They used
to throw in as the host every year when they ran the St. Patrick's Day
parade. I much preferred the Popeye cartoons from the 1930s. He was
talking under his breath all the time and you had to listen closely to
hear the best lines. The later ones from the 1950s were terrible. My
rule of thumb: if Olive Oyl's hairdo is more modern, the cartoon sucks.
"IS THAT TELEVISION BACK ON?!!!"
Last week, with the latest edition of me being "really sick." There was nobody yelling at me to turn off the television. That's because I hardly had the strength to even turn it on.
Dinner last night: Breakfast for dinner. Cinnamon French toast with strawberry preserves and bacon.
Sunday, February 8, 2015
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